Key Takeaways

VanEck sees Ethereum reaching $22,000 by 2030 in its base case.

Fundstrat’s Tom Lee expects ETH to hit $7,000–$9,000 in the near term.

Analyst forecasts vary widely, but most point to long-term growth.

Ethereum could be on a path to dramatic long-term gains, with some analysts projecting prices as high as $22,000 by the end of the decade.

However, forecasts vary widely as the market grapples with adoption trends, competition and macro uncertainty.

While short-term sentiment remains mixed, a growing number of institutional and industry voices argue that Ethereum’s role in global finance could expand significantly over the coming years.

Asset manager VanEck outlined its most ambitious long-term outlooks in a June 2024 report, arguing Ethereum’s utility could drive substantial value accrual to token holders.

“Driven by a strong value proposition to entrepreneurs, the Ethereum network is likely to continue its rapid market share growth from traditional financial market participants and, increasingly, Big Tech,” the firm said.

VanEck said that if Ethereum maintains its dominance among smart contract platforms, it could generate around $66 billion in free cash flow to token holders, supporting a valuation of roughly $2.2 trillion — equivalent to about $22,000 per ETH by 2030.

The firm’s broader scenarios highlight the uncertainty surrounding long-term projections:

Bull case: $154,000.

Base case: $22,000.

Bear case: $360.

Fundstrat Global Advisors’ Tom Lee remains among the more bullish voices, linking Ethereum’s trajectory closely to Bitcoin’s performance and broader institutional adoption.

Lee said Ethereum could reach $7,000 to $9,000 in the near term, even if it experiences short-term volatility.

Looking further out, he suggested that if Bitcoin climbs to $250,000, Ethereum could trade between $12,000 and $22,000, based on historical price ratios.

In more aggressive scenarios, Lee added, Ethereum could surge much higher — potentially reaching $250,000 if Bitcoin were to hit $1 million — though such projections remain highly speculative.

A Finder.com survey of crypto industry executives paints a more moderate but still optimistic picture, with forecasts varying significantly depending on adoption assumptions.

On average, the panel expects ether to reach $11,712 by 2030, rising further to $21,856 by 2035.

Some contributors see stronger upside tied to Ethereum’s role in decentralized finance and tokenized assets.

“A $9,000 ETH in 2026 and $40,000+ by 2035 is a reasonable outcome if Ethereum continues compounding as the settlement layer for global on-chain finance,” Josh Fraser, co-founder of Origin Protocol said.

Jeremy Britton, founder and CFO of BostonTrading, also projected $9,000 by 2026, describing Ethereum as “digital oil” compared to Bitcoin’s “digital gold.”

Despite long-term optimism, some analysts caution that Ethereum’s recovery may be gradual rather than explosive.

Victor Olanrewaju, an analyst at CCN, said current on-chain metrics suggest Ethereum is in a phase historically associated with accumulation rather than rapid rallies.

“Ethereum’s on-chain metrics are deep in capitulation territory,” he wrote, pointing to indicators such as negative MVRV and long-term holder profit levels near zero.

He noted that Ethereum’s spot price is hovering around its realized price — roughly $2,000 to $2,100 — meaning the average holder is near breakeven.

Such conditions have historically marked major turning points, though not immediate rebounds.

“A recovery from here won’t be explosive. Instead, it could be slow, grinding, and dependent on a macro or fundamental catalyst,” Olanrewaju said, adding that weak retail demand remains a headwind.

Still, he described the current range as one of the more favorable long-term risk-reward setups, provided Ethereum holds above key support levels.

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